Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-22 Thread Doug Higby
Vitalie, Monday, May 21, 2007, 10:28:42 PM, you wrote: Vili wrote: A second factor that really improved my speed was defragmenting my Voyager drive. I never thought to do this and **wow** was it fragmented! and? so what? was the drive formatted with NTFS or FAT? unlike

Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Nick Danger
The one major complaint I've had with using Voyager was that it took around 15 minutes for it to clear itself from Window's processes after shutting it down. If I shut it down and suddenly remembered something I needed it for I had to go in and manually stop it before I could restart Voyager.

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Vili
The one major complaint I've had with using Voyager was that it took around 15 minutes for it to clear itself from Window's processes after shutting it down. If I shut it down and suddenly remembered something I needed it for I had to go in and manually stop it before I could restart Voyager.

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Nick Danger
Reply to message sent 05/21/2007, @ 11:02:29 (10:02 AM Locally) ~~~ Hello Vili, I think, it was not the FAT/NTFS change. It was the fact that when you reformatted the drive, you inherently defragmented the drive. Well, I was about to

Re[2]: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Vili
I think, it was not the FAT/NTFS change. It was the fact that when you reformatted the drive, you inherently defragmented the drive. Well, I was about to say I didn't think so as I had defragged the drive before hoping that would help but it didn't. But before sending off that post I figured

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread vitalie vrabie
Vili wrote: I think, it was not the FAT/NTFS change. It was the fact that when you reformatted the drive, you inherently defragmented the drive. obviously, you're too busy enjoying conventional hard drives in an usb enclosure, so, at the moment, you simply can't figure out that not all usb

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Doug Higby
Hello Nick, Monday, May 21, 2007, 2:25:51 PM, you wrote: I reformatted my USB drive to NTFS. I'm guessing it came formatted as FAT as I never bothered to reformat it upon buying it. Running it as NTFS, I can close Voyager down and it closes and clears memory faster almost instantaneously.

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Nick Danger
Reply to message sent 05/21/2007, @ 16:27:20 (11:27 AM Locally) ~~~ Hello Doug, How many Voyager lives did you use up in this test? It seems that every time I reformat my drive, I have to reactivate the key. I think I am down to one

Re[2]: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Vili
Vili wrote: I think, it was not the FAT/NTFS change. It was the fact that when you reformatted the drive, you inherently defragmented the drive. obviously, you're too busy enjoying conventional hard drives in an usb enclosure, so, at the moment, you simply can't figure out that not all usb

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Mark Partous
Hello Nick, Monday, May 21, 2007, 4:25:51 PM, you wrote: ND So if anyone else has had this problem of voyager.exe hanging around ND in memory for far too long, check to see how your USB drive is ND formatted - it may make a difference. Are you talking about a USB HD or a USB memory stick? --

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread Nick Danger
Reply to message sent 05/21/2007, @ 21:27:25 (2:27 PM Locally) ~~~ Hello Mark, Are you talking about a USB HD or a USB memory stick? Memory stick, but it was purchasing a USB hard drive that brought the problem to light. I formatted

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread vitalie vrabie
Vili wrote: A second factor that really improved my speed was defragmenting my Voyager drive. I never thought to do this and **wow** was it fragmented! and? so what? was the drive formatted with NTFS or FAT? unlike FAT, fragmented NTFS files do take extra structures to be

Re: Voyager - a break through moment.

2007-05-21 Thread vitalie vrabie
Vili wrote: - if you are pissed off of me because I did not accept the invitation to your professional network, I am sorry, I just dont have the time for any extra online activity beside the 4 kids, my job and my business. waitaminute. you have 4 kids, and you dare calling *me*